Mitrofan Oana, Paul Moli, Weich Scott, Spencer Nicholas
Academic Clinical Fellow, Warwick Medical School, University of Warwick, Gibbet Hill Road, Coventry, CV4 7AL, UK.
BMC Psychiatry. 2014 Nov 18;14:287. doi: 10.1186/s12888-014-0287-7.
Mental health professionals are often asked to give advice about managing children's aggression. Good quality evidence on contributory environmental factors such as seeing aggression on television and in video games is relatively lacking, although societal and professional concerns are high. This study investigated possible associations between seeing aggression in such media and the aggressive behaviour of children attending specialist outpatient child and adolescent mental health services (CAMHS).
In this mixed methods study, forty-seven British children aged 7-11 years with behavioural/emotional difficulties attending CAMHS and their carers participated in a survey; twenty purposively-selected children and a parent/carer of theirs participated in a qualitative study, involving semi-structured interviews, analysed using the Framework Analysis Approach; findings were integrated.
Children attending CAMHS exhibit clinically significant aggression, of varying types and frequency. They see aggression in multiple real and virtual settings. Verbal aggression was often seen, frequently exhibited and strongly associated with poor peer relationships and low prosocial behaviour. Children did not think seeing aggression influences their own behaviour but believed it influences others. Carers regarded aggression as resulting from a combination of inner and environmental factors and seeing aggression in real-life as having more impact than television/video games.
There is yet no definitive evidence for or against a direct relationship between aggression seen in the media and aggression in children with behavioural/emotional difficulties. Future research should take an ecological perspective, investigating individual, developmental and environmental factors. Carers, professional organisations and policy makers should address aggression seen in all relevant area of children's lives, primarily real-life and secondly virtual environments.
心理健康专业人员经常被要求就管理儿童攻击行为提供建议。尽管社会和专业领域对此高度关注,但关于诸如在电视和电子游戏中看到攻击行为等促成环境因素的高质量证据相对较少。本研究调查了在这类媒体中看到攻击行为与接受专科门诊儿童和青少年心理健康服务(CAMHS)的儿童的攻击行为之间可能存在的关联。
在这项混合方法研究中,47名年龄在7至11岁、有行为/情绪问题且接受CAMHS服务的英国儿童及其照料者参与了一项调查;20名经过有目的选择的儿童及其一名家长/照料者参与了一项定性研究,该研究包括半结构化访谈,并采用框架分析方法进行分析;研究结果进行了整合。
接受CAMHS服务的儿童表现出具有临床意义的攻击行为,其类型和频率各不相同。他们在多种真实和虚拟场景中看到攻击行为。言语攻击经常被看到、频繁出现,且与不良同伴关系和低亲社会行为密切相关。孩子们认为看到攻击行为不会影响他们自己的行为,但相信会影响他人。照料者认为攻击行为是内在因素和环境因素共同作用的结果,并且认为在现实生活中看到攻击行为比在电视/电子游戏中有更大的影响。
对于媒体中看到的攻击行为与有行为/情绪问题的儿童的攻击行为之间是否存在直接关系,目前尚无确凿证据。未来的研究应从生态角度出发,调查个体、发育和环境因素。照料者、专业组织和政策制定者应关注儿童生活中所有相关领域出现的攻击行为,主要是现实生活中的,其次是虚拟环境中的。